State v. Collins

986 S.W.2d 13, 1998 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 254
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 3, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 986 S.W.2d 13 (State v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Collins, 986 S.W.2d 13, 1998 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 254 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

GARY R. WADE, Judge.

The defendant, Jennifer Collins, was convicted of second degree murder. The trial court imposed a Range I sentence of fifteen years. In this appeal of right, the defendant raises the following issues:

(I) Whether the evidence is sufficient to support her conviction;
(II) Whether the trial court committed error by admitting autopsy photographs of the victim; and
(III) Whether the trial court should have classified her as an especially mitigated offender.

Because of the admission of certain of the photographs of the victim, which we have concluded are prejudicial and had little or no probative value, we must reverse the conviction and remand for a new trial. The factual issues presented at trial, especially those relative to the various degrees of homicide, are simply too close to allow for a harmless error adjudication.

In July of 1993, the defendant, who grew up in Copper Hill, Tennessee, and graduated from high school there in 1992, became pregnant by her boyfriend, Keith Crouch. Shortly thereafter, she was able to verify her condition by the use of a home pregnancy test. The defendant, who held a summer job at the time of conception, did not reveal her condition to family or friends and told her boyfriend that she had aborted the pregnancy. In August of 1993, the defendant returned to the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga and moved into a four bedroom campus apartment with three other female students. By wearing loose clothing, the defendant, who was five feet ten inches tall with a slender build, was able to hide her pregnancy from her roommates. She sought no prenatal care.

During the late evening hours of Saturday, April 9, and the early morning hours of Sunday, April 10, 1994, the defendant, nineteen years old at the time, went into labor. She left her bedroom and went into a small bathroom containing only a commode and bath and separated from the vanity area. At about 9:00 A.M., when the defendant began to scream and cry because of her pain, one of her roommates, Twyla Fuller, was awakened and offered help. Later, Michelle Robertson was awakened. Twice the defendant asked for towels and opened the door slightly. Later, she asked for and received a pair of scissors, shortly after which she opened the bathroom door and collapsed to the floor. There was blood throughout the bathroom. The toilet lid was shut and was draped with a towel. There were two male house guests, Marcus Standipher and Alexander Booker, who had stayed in the apartment throughout the weekend.

The defendant’s roommates were unable to acquire assistance from a nurse at a “small hospital” across the street from the apartment. After several minutes, they returned to their apartment and called 911. When paramedics arrived and questioned the defendant, who was still lying in the’doorway of her bathroom, she denied the possibility of being pregnant. Upon examination, the paramedics observed that the defendant had poor vital signs. When lifted to a chair, she suffered a seizure and lost consciousness. After being revived and upon further inquiry by the paramedics, the defendant acknowledged that she was pregnant. Paramedic Glenn King, who suspected a miscarriage, lifted the lid of the closed toilet searching for fetal tissue. He discovered a full-term infant who showed no signs of life.

An autopsy by the county medical examiner determined that the infant victim, who weighed seven pounds and two ounces, had lived at least two minutes. Drowning was deemed to be the cause of death.

The theory of the state can best be described in a question propounded to Dr. Fred King, the Hamilton County Medical Examiner:

And, Dr. King, with regard to hypotheti-eals, would your findings be consistent with a hypothetical situation in which a mother was sitting upon a commode and *16 did not lose consciousness, but the baby was born from the mother and the mother watched the baby go into the commode and the baby drowned there in the commode? The answer was that it “would be physically possible. ...”

The theory of the defense is best described in its hypothetical question to Dr. King:

A woman seated on the commode feels the birth process start, never having experienced it before, panics, and basically faints or passes out leaning against the wall to the side, sitting there on the commode. The birth process continues, the baby gets out of the birth canal, at that time the baby starts gulping for air.... The baby takes two, three gulps.... [T]he birth process is finished. The baby is dropped in the water, the mother here [is] still passed out. The baby is still going to gulp, isn’t it?
A. Yes.
Q. That’s where the fresh water could come from, isn’t it?
A. Yes.
Q. Doctor, did that hypothetical fit your autopsy?
A. Yes, that would be a possibility.
Q. Thank you doctor. Even to the bump on the head, wouldn’t it, doctor?
A. The [small] hemorrhage on the back of the head could be caused by the baby’s head hitting against the toilet bowl as it was delivered, that would be a reasonable explanation for that impact, yes.

The defense offered no proof. Thus, all of the evidence at trial was introduced through the state. Ms. Fuller, who was the first of the apartment occupants to be awakened by the screams, testified that the defendant was “crying” and “hysterical.” She recalled asking Booker what had happened and his response was that the defendant had been “up and down all night.” Ms. Fuller recalled that she did not look inside the bathroom because she thought the defendant was vomiting. She remembered intermittent periods of quiet. Ms. Fuller awoke Ms. Robertson just before the defendant asked for scissors and remembered that it was only when she insisted that the door be opened, saying ‘You’re scaring the hell out of me,” that the defendant emerged from the bath and toilet area of the bathroom and fell to the floor. Ms. Fuller recalled that there was “blood everywhere.”

Ms. Fuller and Standipher sought help from the medical clinic across the street from their apartments but returned to their room to call 911 when no one agreed to help. At trial, Ms. Fuller recalled that the defendant, who was still lying in the floor of the bathroom area, said that she did not want to go to the hospital. Ms. Fuller testified that it was several minutes before the paramedics arrived and recalled that the defendant experienced a seizure and convulsions after the initial treatment was begun. She testified that the paramedic asked the defendant whether she was pregnant and remembered that the defendant provided an affirmative response. Ms. Fuller described the defendant as “white,” “weak,” and “too bad off’ to respond to questioning, claiming she could “hardly talk.” She said she thought the defendant “was going to die.”

Ms. Fuller testified that the defendant, who was tall and slender, usually wore men’s shirts and baggy khaki shorts. She said the defendant took exercise class, went to a tanning bed, and generally conducted herself like any student.

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Bluebook (online)
986 S.W.2d 13, 1998 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-collins-tenncrimapp-1998.